1015 ec-iffl so be a difpofahje natioica] property, which eO"M r n triare l»e alienated shan the raiii parts of'i fortified place, tfe pybfic'mwlim.-nt'i of a commune, rr the lands referred for the foads. AVith refpefl to the purehafers of na tions! domain?, he many of them as feandafous frauds : in the department Ettre, a chateau, vahted at 61Q,r,00 livres in'ip, bar 1 , bem given foi in mandats. He ilemanried that the fa'e of the parfomjte houses fhouhi be put a to ; that they fhotild be it the d'fpQ!at,of the communes; and that the sale of all thole difoofed of since aj.Rrumaire, of.the fec.iud year, (houid be declared null and invalid.—Adopted. The ftriking-.proof of animosity displayed by the opposite parties in the fitting of the Council of Five Hundred of the 20th inft. appear to have spread fame alar/n among the friends' of the present coiiftitution of France. All the public prints demoted to the party of the moderates, are filled with the most af fedting complaints, and the strongest appre hensions on the occasion of this unexpected division. L'Eclair eXpresses himfelf ip the following manner 011 this interesting fubjedt: " The cdfis approaches : all the symp toms of a new revolution already begin to appear, uiegiarties are already raisged up in battle array again ft each other. Yet a few days, and the sword will decide. Discord has taken ppfTeffion of the Council of Five Hundred, and it will not be cast cjut till it has gorged itfelf with the blood of the one party or the other ; perhaps of both. " Woe be to him," said a sage, " Woe he to him thro whom offence cometh!" Woe be to you, Reprefcntatives of the People, when, degrading the ituguft chara£ter with which you are inverted, yort transform your Senate to an arena for Gladiators ! Can you hope that men will refpeft you when you do not refpedt Vourfelves ? And how do you hope to govern, if you do not inipire refpett ? " Which party is to blame ? Both. I will fay this, however, that if violence can St all be pardoned it is iu the vanished mino rity. But you, the favorite Representatives of the People ; you, of whom a united ma jority is always sure to triumph, how can such excuses be juftifisd in you ? What evil geuitis could inspire von with the fatal tho't of terminat ing by the spirit of faction, a dif cufiion in which you were sure to be victo rious, by displaying with calmness and with dignity the whole power of your will ? " Cybeas, on entering the Roman Senate, imagined himfelf tranfportedinto an afTembly of Kings : What would he have faid,had he been a fpeftator of such indecent contests ? And, great God ! at what a moment do you rellgn yourfelf to the impulse of your brutal paflions ? At the moment when the envoys of the King of England arrive to treat for'peaee ! Do you believe that scenes of this nature are very well calculated to in spire them with a high confidence in the wisdom and in the liability of our govern ment ?' " If you overthrow, or if you allow the Constitutional Republic to be overthrown, you will fall into the military Republic, and the latter will be more dreadful than the former. To day you are magistrates ; to morrow you will be slaves. Amicus Plato magis arnica Veritas. Never was there a fay ing more necefiary to be repeated jpd ob served. " On what'points then does the crisis in which France is-placed, depend at this mo-, ment! On the retaining or difmifTal of four ministers, whom the majority of both coun cils, and the whole nation accuse of igno rance and perfidy, and whom the Diredtory obstinately persists in preserving as the agents of the Executive Power." On this fubjedt of ditutiion we meet with the following re marks in the fame' Journal : " In every country that wiflies to preserve its tranquility and happioefs, the ablest and wisest men- should be called to the manage ment of public affairs. Confidence is extin guished in every heart when folly and igno rance obftruft the avenues tp the feat of gov ernment. Cease then, Directors, to shut your ears to our prayers ! VVe entreat you, in the name of your country, to dismiss from their employments, and banish from your presence, Ramel, Charles La Croix, Truguet, and Merlin. The last is peculiar ly unworthy, your notice. As longasyou remain surrounded by such ministers, how can you pofiibly exj» (ft, that we, who are both by good will and reason firmly bound to support the prefefltorderof things, should protest you against the and com plaints of those, who, regretting what thejf have loft, eagerly desire to return to that point from which they firft set out ? Were we to be your adyocates, should we not ex pose ourfelvesto thejuft reproaches of either flattering stupidity, or of being the accom plices of wicked men ? We makethis request on your as well as our own account. When you shall have granted it, we will then en deavour to recal to reason those of our bre thren who are now tormented with unavail ing anxiety." ARMY OF CONDE. . Order of the .20 ti July, 1797. " His majejly, the tmptror of Rujfts, has done me the honor to inform me, that the king of France has made a propo/ttion io him refpcß ing this army ; and his imperial majeflyflatters himfelf that his, majejly and myfelf will he equal ly fatisjied with the overtures which his mini- Jler is commifjioned to make me in his name. " The emperor of Rujfta is willing to grant every relief to this army. He is about to apply to the courts of Vienna and London, to continue their generous benefySious to it. Until the ar rangements will be made, he dejires me to rejl j ujfured, that from the moment hejhall take charge of the aryiy, every individua in it, from j the highejl lieutenant general to the loiuejl soldier j who is willing to take advantage of his kindness. ■ lhall preserve the fame rank andpay as he al ; this moment enjoys. We cannot know, until j the return of the courier which is to be sent to j Rvjfta what is the nature of the h. reditarygrants 1 iL-l:h his imperial majejly intends to promt fe this ' • army befuUs granting to the French nobility the ] 1 feme privileges which nobles of Rujfta. enjoy ." j < J' j LONDON, sfusjifi 7. | r ! I''""™* F»'j%niv, died °* foJF*? 0 n if} - lid Jidy : his body after j. j t " c etretinates, was committed to the deep. m 1 I?reparations for war are earru jon with t " c greatejl erSivi/y tn, Germany. A Jlrong de >'• tadnn'nt from the Aujlrtin army on 'tis Lower Ie Rhine has begun its march towards the tfrrito " nes "["rped during the -war by the king ofPruf fch who hi; par!, inereafed, the fiirce under the Duke of Brunfwici to 6b,000 men, lt J and given orders for the ejiabhfhment oftha gazines near the scene ofcontejl. 'it is said, he never, that that Monarch has with drawn his : d troops from the city of Nuremburg ; and if this K W'true it may hoped he will be induced to t. j to the voice ofjufltce, without the interpqfi ie : tion of arms. Prudence, indeed, may have e. JuggeJedthis line of conduct : for the eleßor of y j of Saxony, on whose support Frederick William f- ; appears to have depended,has not only abandon e. Ed his cause, but has affeml'ed an army of d men, to second the efforts of the law ie chief of the German empire. 5 0 15y this day's Mail. n * , «r BOSTON, Sept. 18. d Navy Yard, September 18. r e The conllru&or, having exttnded to his it fellow-citizens, all reasonable gratification of [e f their laudable curiosity, during the progress of the buildmg, believes he may with pro ■te priety make the following request and fug. Ie geflions, on the operation of launching the frigate Conjlitution. h That (excepting the I'refideut of the U r nited States, the Governor, Lieutenant Go n vernor, and their refpedtive suites, and o n thers specially admitted, who will compara -0 tively, be very few) no person will attempt e in any way, to pass into the limits of the navy yard. J The reason of this reqfieft is obviously to i r, ; prevent interrupfion or confufion which might i be injurious or ruinous to the a£t of launch- -1 s ing ; which will be critical, under the molt : . favorable circumstances, and indispensably re- i n quiring perfect silence and obedience to or- 1 1 ders. Independent of this conclusive reason, i t the danger of encroaching fpe&ators would | be imminent from the occasional and abrupt I . falling of bodies used in the conftrudtion of ( l the ship ; a conformity therefore to this re- 1 quest, is earnestly solicited. i , ' Itl9 . fu g?efted, as the tide will be full, t f that it wojild be necefiary to the fafety of \ the fpedtators, particularly women and chil- < > dren, that they do not approach in crouds I j too near the margin of the contiguous r wharves, as the sudden entrance of so large . a body as the frigate, will occasion an inftan > taneousfwell of the water the height of which ; i cannot be easily calculated,and again (I which, n . therefore, the discretion of the people ought v . amply to guard, It is regretted, in this instance, that the c yard and the places around it, are too con- y . traded for an occasion which will probably ii ) excite so much desire, and in which all the [ citizens have so much interest ; it is there f fore submitted to those who can make th* b . arrangement, to place themselves in vessels, a , or water crafts, at due distance, upon the pro- h . file or fide of the Frigate, but by no means p too near, either in a right line or otherwise, a as the direction may be uncertain, nor to load i open boats too deeply, as the agitation of . the water even at a considerable distance, may be somewhat hazard us. It is also recommended to those who eredt c . stages to accommodate fpedtators, that they o have them secured in every refpedt, as the J ! lofsoflife of a single citizen, would mar the lj fatisfadtion and pleasure that the conftrudtOr . etherwife would enjoy, of building and con- si dudting into the ocean, z powerful agent of u . national justice, which hope didtates may be- t( come the just pride and ornament of the A- fj merican name. c ' GEORGE CLAGHORN. tl V NEW-YORK, September 2i. C A British gentleman writes from Port-au- si Paix, August 21. bi " I was taken the 9th off the Mole on my 01 way to America, and brought in here—l am on my parole, and hope soon to be exchang- ai ed, as a change of condudt for is di expedted ; Santhonax having failed from at hence for France on Saturday last, in an In- at diaman." ,' gj b' • sHE LAND OF LIBERTY!! in A CURIOSITY ce Just arrived from Cape Mount, on the ci windward coast of Africa, the ship Ageno- ti ria, Edward Bois, master, with a prime car- th go of afTorted SLAVES. The sale of fe which will commence on Monday, the 21ft of inlt—Conditions then made known. in ROBERT WATTS. fti Savannah, 10th August, 1797. an FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE, pa Continued. ha \ dl " PARIS, Augnfl 5. wr General Pichegru had his pocket picked pr< df his watch in the Jardin d ; ltalie, while walking by the fide of the Ottoman am bassador. ItATISBON, July 20. '* ha: There appears reason to apprehend the Hi molt violent discussions in the Diet here, on ma the fubjedt <>f the articles of peace conelud- bu ed between the emperor and the French re- tin public. From the moment of signing the Svi preliminaries, the emperor has kept the W most profound iilence as to "their contents ; int ! the French "announced that their republic nol was acknowledged in all its integrity, which tea J gave the greatest uneasiness to the princes we j and states, whose territory had been declar- W ;ed an integral part of the French republic, al ; It was only 011 the 22d of June tha% the th( 1 imperial cabinet notified to the diet that oni • the preliminaries had been signed, an event ly j which took place at Leobeii, on the 18th be. ■ April. The form of this imperial decree, Di 1 the equivocal expreflions which are contain- vvh jcd in ic, and a certain tone of eoibarrafT- cili ' tnent which prevails througTioirt It, were d not vary well calculated to raise the spirits r of men.* The bishop of Liege, among >. others, having applied t!> his imperial ma h jelly to know, whether after the-concfufron of the peace he should enter into the pot r feffiori of his bilhoprick, received the sol - lowing laconic and at the fame time Jcfiiti - cal reply ; << That the integrity of the e empire had been adopted as the basis of the ', treaty of peace to be concluded between !- France and the empire.'' This answer, e which to short-sighted men may appear fa s tisfa&ory, only served to increase the uitea s finefs of those who look forward' at alriy 0 diflanee. Add to this, the good undcrflanding f which prevails between the court of Vienna f and the French government, and the fecu -1 rity of the latter as to the possession nf its - new department. The following incident f is however deserving of attention :—Seve - ral dates of the empire have officially an nounced to the diet, that the German bo i dy, fully confident of the wifdam and mag nanimity of their chief head, entreats him to accept an absolute authority to conclude a peace. We are aflurfd that the ecclesi astical prince who brought forward this at the dfet, afied sincerely, but was betrayed 3 into the measure by others more artful than f himfelf, whose reasoning was this : "If 3 the emperor has really obtained a stipulation - for the integrity of the empire, he will ac cept the offer with great readiness, as it : will add to the glory of the house of Au stria, but if not he will rejeft it." This - very circumstance has caused the tmperor to express himfelf diflatisfied with one of his commiflioners, who supported the pro position. Ihe solution of the enigma is now whif • pered—notwiftanding tl\e pafiVge in the im perial decree, which secures ihe integrity ' of the empire, the imperious force of cii cumftances renders it neceflary to construe ■ - this sentence as applying to the constitution, and not to the territory of the empire, and it is with reason apprehended, that some of ■ the prelacies wilLbe secularized. This will , necefTarily produce complaints in the diet,- I Ind protests on the part of the injured ■ itates; but it will not be difficult for the emperor's, ministers to juftify their mailer, by shewing what he his done, as his /hare in this dreadful war, and, by appealing to the princes and dates individually, to know whtther each of them has done all |J)at he ■ could, and that he ought to have done, on his part. • \ ROME, July 7. The agitation here, as well as in the other parts of the estates of the church, conti nues to be very great f The pope yesterday went from the Vatican to the Quirinal Pa lace, without acclamation and without croud. He may yet survive his illness some years, and the people are not deftrous of innovation. A letter is in circulation here, written by gefferal Buonaparte to cardinal Mattci, at Terrara, in which the general fays, that he is daily invited to Rome to the peo ple there better laws, and a constitution more agreeable to the rights of man. BRUSSELS, Jnly 31. The following are the most certain ac counts of the marches and countermarches of the troops of the army of the Sambre and Meufe towards the interior of the Repub lic. Some days ago an order arrived for cau sing all the troops, as well as the artillery who had pafTcdtheancient frontiers ofFrance to retreat. Several corps began according ly to retreat, but on tha 27th of July there came very prefling orders from" Paris, for all the troops to march into the interior of the Republic. A column which had come from Charleroi.to Namur, set off without reding, for Givet apd all the troops in the 'neigh bourhood and* the Park of artillery set off on the fame night for the interior. It may be asked why these troops, who are said to be destined for a maritime expe dition, carry with them such a quantity of artillery and warlike stores? why they are accompanied by flying artillery, by four re giments of horse chasseurs, by dragoons and by hussars? Without answering all these important queflions, we can only fay, as a certain fadl, that attempts are made to ex cite the troops against part of the Legisla tive Body. Wherever the detachments of the army of the Sambre and Meufe have pas sed, they have (hewn the mod dreadful want of discipline, pillaging their hods, ill ufu- I ing them, and when the latter complained, stigmatizing them with the names of Chou ans and Royalids. ( They write from Mavy, that the Munici- i pal Adminidration of the Canton of Ballon 1 has caused it to be proclaimed by found of ! drum, that all the Citizens (hall declare in ( writing the Religion which they refufe to ( profefs. " < BASLE, Jilly 25. \ ' a We are assured that Gtneral Buonaparte a has tedified discontent at the refufal of the t Helvetic Body relative to the passage de- 1 mawded through the Valais. It is even said c but that wants confirmation, that tie has in- J, timated a resolution to force this passage, if 0 Switzerland (hall not consent to grant it. '* We know not why this General is so much *' intereded about this passage, which Would not be very ufeful to his army, and why he a teazes the Swiss so much to obtain it; for a we can hardly believe, as the friends of Mr. F Wickham would insinuate, that the Goner al is desirous of a pretence to intermeddle in a the affairs of Switzerland, and to revoluti- j. onize some Cantons, who are not very friend- n ly to popular tumults. However that may be, the Swiss confide in the promise of the a Directory, and in the vifdora of Bsrthelemy c who so well possesses the rare talent of con- 5 ciliating inlte d of esafpetating. 1, * ©ajctte. n PHILADELPHIA,' FRIDAY EVENING, September 11. CITV HOS PIT AT REPO RT, e From the 2id to 22d Sept. in the morning. e Admitted, since lad report, n Andrew M'Kew—Gordon M'Neal's Small ■ f dreet. - Alex. Henry—Walnut, corner 4th dreet. - John Chapman—B7,/South Water dreet. y Margaret 1 lbbs—Saint's, 6, Vernon dreet. Ann Potter—South, near 4th dreet. y Margaret Guer^n — : -2d, between Spruce & a Dock-dreetj Sarah Fi(her—No. 35, Almond-drcet 3 Eflher Lauufon—Harris's, South, above t sth dreet. v ■_ Caty Culinel— 2, near Rope-walks. Discharged, iince lad report, John Kifney, admitted 16th inft. . Elizabeth e Remaining lad Report 51 . Admitted iince, y i 60 I Discharged 2 f NONE —— 2 . Five of whom are dangerous, s Interred in City Hospital burying ground r since lad report : f From the city and suburbs 9 From the city hospital None. Total 9 Stephen Girard, (Signed) Caleb Lownes, John Connelly. : Published by order of the Board, Wm. MONTGOMERY, [ Chairman pro tern. 1 Total of luriah for 24 hours, ending yefler day at noon. Grown Person». Childr n. Third Prefbyteri.m « . o Second frsfbyterijn I o St. Mary's o I Methodists I o City Hospital* 1 o Total 5 I * From the city and fuburls. \ ' D ied, this morning, Mr. James Carey, ' Clerk to Mr. Andrew Brown, Editor of the Philadelphia Gazette. A Hint to the Citizens of Philadelphia. THIS day, about two o'clock in the af ternoon, a fire was discovered to be burning in a large quantity of shingles, in Mr. Stog den's board yard, a little above Callowhill dreet, in the Nothern Liberties. It being seen by the fmoak, as soon as it began to burn, by the alertness of the inhabitants it! was soon extinguished. Matches were found i which it had been kindled with, and brought i to my office. There is no doubt with me, 1 but it was done to set Are to the neighbour- 1 hood, as one half of the people are moved out of it. JOSEPH COWPERTHWAIT September, 21. Tie following is tie notice taken iy Bachc a parsgrafb in ll r tdnefJa\ t Gazette. " To ije an objei* of the abuse of an hireling tvretdjy capable of iuch. sentiments as the foreg*>inu difclofcj, i# an honor to a republican ; w* fliali j therefore always fee happy when Fenno ihall pleafc ; to favor us with a portion of his billingsgate. But 1 the abenre paragraph d i'erves to be conficUrcd in j another view. John Fcnno's preft is patronised by | this jfov.ernment ; he is the printer for one of the , highest branch# of it,—the Senate : Will it npt ! be considered then, that he speaks their sentiments; • and, if so, vhp.t are we to e*pe£l from France, j ihould a counter-revolution and the ment of Royalty toot take ptecc. Publications such as the foregoing, arc well calculated to rcurifh the 4ifquietode wliic #xirts between this country and France, and to leidto a rupture ; they are no doubr, therefore, ivell paid for, —by Mr. Ljston. We mcution this consideration in exculpation of our jjovemmcu; (whom we do not think capable of ( p/jompting luch diabolical ientimCMs) that the true source of them may be ufiderftood abroad, to be Entifh, and not to come from our executive admin- 1 illration, who by th.ir countenance of Fenno's 1 press might appear implicated." F It is, to be sure, little better than wafting time * and room to notice such paltry jargon : But one r ca.inot refrain from contempt at feeing this black c guar.l, afferifon-lhip, and am : dfl tbs lonthfome flench of the tender's hold, while the poetailer, Fi cncau,.' was idly dwuntlnst, in fulfMne »nd.lc3i?tn Aiaica, the horrors of the pti~ "* '""-Oup.or uniting; lazy-lajfging.rhymesf.ir newf b*viand hjwlcors. Two had, while alive';.the „ prculi.ir boafV ot fe.-'ving through ths vvHote war. from the hawk- of 1 ejington to the of York town Amliiis fftth a; rain ■« litis day tofcere-- proac'-ed with ntfcchOMnt to Royalty, by an.up itait birehng ?, f:\f^a i to difcrjminate rightly, the ■t. worn Rsylifm, is Jacobinicalty applied to those ac •t. 'f " tO . tl,e »«>d order of society, and to t the exiffmg form of government.- The Jacobins hate all joveritmert alika. and their chief aim is to make affitalhacfcles. Joh-7 Fenno, like many o & thers, havr g fesn the consequences of mobocraey, through a long- course of and/ ' f nd upon a fu " cor.victon that the meafiire Will be mutually beneficial to them and to the 1 United States. The colleflor of the cuftomshas ! arrangements to eftahlifli for some time ' ' , branches of the cunoin-hnufe at those places, WieVe tvtry accommodati.in in his power will be given to the merchants. r] tw i| %* A special Meeting of the* lclea and common Councils of \he City of l|hi!a